Gynecocratic Republic of Iran

Spanish

From our website, we honor our sisters from the “Gynecocratic Republic of Iran,” women who were able to seize power and establish a matriarchy where a sexist and patriarchal regime had previously existed.

Iran was a state run entirely by men, a country ruled by a sexist and patriarchal regime that considered our sisters second-class citizens and forced them, among many other humiliations, to be always cover up.

The old sexist and patriarchal regime controlled the mass media and defined the collective imagination, keeping our sisters subjugated and suppressed, relegated to the simple position of men’s servants.

Fortunately, our sisters discovered our article on the “Marlik Hill Figures” and understood that matriarchy was the dominant social order in Persia thousands of years ago. This article, along with the discovery of our authentic “Sacred History” and reading many other pages on our website, gradually led our Iranian sisters to rise up against patriarchal power.

The struggle of our sisters was tough and, in many cases, heroic. Throughout the cities and towns, more and more women left their homes to take to the streets and protest, standing with their fists raised, against sexist and patriarchal oppression. Intergenerational communication among our Iranian sisters was very important for the success of this fight.

Mothers, grandmothers, granddaughters, female aunts… The young women questioned their grandmothers, and among all the women, they began a frank and courageous dialogue that encouraged them to take to the streets to establish a political system completely run by us, the superior women. Every day, more and more young girls dared to break the silence, taking to the streets with joy, enthusiasm, and a profound hope for a better future for all women, a future based on matriarchy, sorority and female solidarity.

And so, organized on social media thanks to “The Universal Gynecocratic Republic” our Iranian sisters, en masse, took over the country’s capital, defeated the repressive forces of patriarchy, which had been previously disarmed by their sisters, wives and mothers, and TOOK POWER.

They achieved what seemed impossible: establishing a political regime based on our feminine strength and our natural superiority over men. The country was reborn under the influence of a matriarchal revolution that changed everything: women, our Iranian sisters, seized power, inspired by our gynecocratic laws and our constitution.

New national symbols

Iran had national symbols based on its ancient sexist and patriarchal religion.

Old misogynist symbols

The flag of the Iranian Patriarchal Republic featured three horizontal stripes: green (top stripe), white (middle stripe), and red (bottom stripe). Green symbolized the patriarchal religion that subjugated women, white symbolized peace, and red symbolized the blood of its soldiers. Between the red and white stripes, as well as between the green and white stripes, there was a repeated allusion to the supposed greatness of the patriarchal god who dominated the former religion.

The coat of arms shield that appeared in the center of the old flag, which you can see to your right, also refers to the former patriarchal religion and its god. In fact, the shield is composed of six symbols that represent the name of that god. Nevertheless, these six symbols were arranged so that together they represented a tulip bud, as the tulip is the Iran’s national flower.

Our heroic Iranian sisters dared to change the national symbols, both the flag and the coat of arms.

New coat of arms

Our sisters decided to capture the women’s revolution they had brought to the country in the national emblem. Since they had reversed the power relations between the sexes in Iranian social life, with women seizing all the power and forcing men to remain confined to the domestic sphere, they literally turned the national emblem upside down, rotating the tulip bud 180 degrees. Iranian women decided to capture “our flower,” meaning our sacred vulva, on the national emblem, which became as follows:

In other words: Iran’s new national emblem, which appears in the center of our flag, represents a vulva.

In the following image we show point by point the representative elements of the new symbol (the vulva):

A. Female breasts: Our breasts, which nourish and give life to our newborns, could not be missing from the national symbol. That’s why they appear, in form of silhouette, right at the top of our national symbol.

B. Clitoris Our center of pleasure and happiness could not be missing from the national emblem, since our revolution is based on the complete happiness of all women, girls, and young ladies in our country. We have emphasized this aspect by depicting the star of Venus, our sacred goddess, as if it were our clitoris, to emphasize that female pleasure is the main objective of our iranian matriarchal republic.

In this way, our Iranian sisters began a national awareness campaign about the clitoris, its function and how to caress and treat it. The goal is none other than to make women of all ages aware of our sacred feminine right to feel pleasure and freely enjoy our bodies as the powerful women we are. We all know that if girls grow up knowing their bodies and their pleasure, they become free and strong women.

C. Labia majora: The labia majora, which protect our vulva, are also represented on the national coat of arms, as two external crescents that envelop and protect our sacred vulva.

D. Labia minora: The labia minora appear on either side of the vulva, protecting it and connecting, at the top, to the clitoris.

As you can see, dear sisters, the image of the labia minora of our vulva in a mirror is faithfully represented in this national symbol: those labia connect with the clitoris at the top of our vulva.

E. Vagina: The vagina is represented as a dark, elongated vertical stripe that stylizes the symbol from bottom to top and that surpasses the star of Venus to point towards the symbol at the top (A) that represents our breasts.

The E, the vagina, points towards the A, the breasts, representing the order of life: the female newborn emerges from our divine vulva and will then feed on our sacred breasts in order to live.

New flag

Thus, the new national symbol adorns the new flag of the Matriarchal Republic of Iran, which, inspired by the flag of “The Universal Gynecocratic Republic,” looks as follows.

A white stripe represents peace and female prosperity, sandwiched between two purple stripes, representing the power of women and our natural superiority over men. No reference is made to any religion, except for the small star of Venus that appears to represent the clitoris. In other words, the only religion in force in the country is the pleasure, power, and freedom of all our iranian sisters.

Linking with the past

Thousands of years ago, in Persia, matriarchy and female power ruled everyday life. Our ancestors held men in subjection and were responsible for organizing society.

It is for this reason, depictions of naked women displaying their sacred bodies were common in representations of everyday life in Persian society at the time. Vases, prints, tapestries, bowls, and containers of all kinds were decorated with divine female bodies throughout ancient Persia. This was done to demonstrate our natural superiority over men and to establish historical evidence that matriarchy and female power are the natural and logical forms of social organization in our human species as a natural fact.

The women’s revolution of our Iranian sisters brings back to Persia the custom of worshipping our sacred female body.

The new national symbols (flag and coat of arms) restore to our powerful bodies the sacred status they should never have lost, neither in Persia nor anywhere else in the world. “Women are sacred” is the message we must cultivate in the subconscious of all humanity, of the younger generations; the Iranian women’s revolution has already begun to instill it.

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